'<i>Planning in the Early Medieval Landscape</i> – the title of both the book and the research project on which it is based – is a major contribution to the long-running and much-debated question as to when and how the English medieval countryside took shape. [...] These and many other insights are presented clearly and concisely in a compact volume that is likely to become an essential reference text for all Anglo-Saxonists.'Neil Faulkner, <i>Current Archaeology</i>
'This fascinating book... introduces us to disparate and intriguing pieces of evidence... It has implications for historical transitions, including the impact of the Norman Conquest.'
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Thomas Pickles, <i>English Historical Review</i>
<p>‘I would strongly recommend this book to everyone interested in medieval settlement... the authors here offer a thesis which many readers may find compelling and will provide widespread inspiration to look at known sites in a new light.’ Carenza Lewis, <em>Medieval Settlement Research</em></p>
Planning in the Early Medieval Landscape is a completely new perspective on how villages and other settlement were formed. It combines map and field evidence with manuscript treatises on land-surveying to show that the methods described in the treatises were not just theoretical, but were put into practice. In doing so it reveals a major aspect of previously unrecognised early medieval technology.
2. Early medieval settlements and field systems
3. Identifying planning in the early medieval landscape
4. Planning technologies in post-Roman Europe and their impact on English practice
5. Higher-status settlements in England, c.600-1050
6. Rural settlements in England, c.600-1050
7. Conclusions
Appendix A: Perches, post-holes and grids
Appendix B: Anglo-Saxon grids and the designing of buildings, with special reference to churches and the square root of two
Appendix C: Catalogue of Grid-Planned Sites
Bibliography